Academic Search Premier formats citations in your choice of citation styles, including APA, Chicago/Turabian: Author-Date, Chicago/Turabian: Humanities, MLA, and more. Click on the "Cite this Article" or "Export to Bibliographic Manager" icons from an individual record, OR select a Citation Format from the drop down list when you print, email or save.

Searchable database of weekly reports that cover coverage of health, social trends, criminal justice, international affairs, education, the environment, technology, and the economy. Reports include an overview; background and chronology on the topic; an assessment of the current situation; tables and maps; pro/con statements from representatives of opposing positions; and bibliographies of key sources. CQ Researcher is an excellent place to start your research about contemporary issues or to get a topic idea. Issue Tracker lets users trace topics through years and across decades. Issue Tracker allows researchers to quickly gather their research on the historical development of hot topics and events that have shaped the world and explore how issues and institutions have evolved over time. Service is limited to 5 simultaneous users.

To create a bibliographic citation of a report accessed in CQ Researcher, select the "CiteNow!" link to generate a citation based the APA, Bluebook, Chicago, or MLA citation styles.

Access to over 300 reference books in a broad range of topic areas, from general reference to art to technology. Credo Reference includes encyclopedias, dictionaries, thesauri and books of quotations, as well as subject-specific titles in a diverse range of subjects.

Gale’s Archive of Sexuality and Gender draws primary source material from hundreds of LGBTQ institutions, including major international activist organizations and local, grassroots groups. The archive contains personal correspondence, interviews, gay and lesbian newspapers, policy statements, and other documents from 1940 to the present. In addition, the archive encompasses extensive material related to feminism and women’s rights.

This HeinOnline collection brings together legal materials on slavery in the United States and the English-speaking world. This includes every statute passed by every colony and state on slavery, every federal statute dealing with slavery, and all reported state and federal cases on slavery. Our cases go into the 20th century, because long after slavery was ended, there were still court cases based on issues emanating from slavery. To give one example, as late as 1901 Chief Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr. of the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court had to decide if a man, both of whose parents had been slaves, could be the legitimate heir of his father, because under southern law, slaves could never be legally married. The library has hundreds of pamphlets and books written about slavery—defending it, attacking it or simply analyzing it, including an expansive slavery collection from Buffalo Erie County Public Library. The cooperation of this institution was central to developing this collection. We have also gathered every English-language legal commentary on slavery published before 1920, which includes many essays and articles in obscure, hard-to-find journals in the United States and elsewhere. We have provided more than a thousand pamphlets and books on slavery from the 19th century. We have also included many modern histories of slavery. Within this library is a section containing all modern law review articles on the subject. This library will continue to grow, not only from new scholarship but also from historical material that we continue to locate and add to the collection.

JSTOR A full-text, scholarly database that features the back issues of journals in the Arts & Sciences and Business ... [more]

JSTOR presents the complete runs of journals, as well as select monographs, transactions, and conference proceedings. Bryant subscribes to 5 multidisciplinary Arts and Sciences collections that include core journals in economics, history, political science, sociology, archaeology, classics, African, Latin American, Middle Eastern, and Slavic studies, languages and literature, music, film studies, folklore, performing arts, religion, the history and study of art and architecture, and more. The Business Collection features core titles in economics and finance, including publications from leading scholarly societies and a range of critical research journals in accounting, labor relations, marketing, management, operations research, and risk assessment. The Biological Sciences Collection covers ecology, evolutionary biology, plant science, animal science, paleontology, and conservation. Full text is typically not available for the most recent 3 - 5 years.

This resource includes digital reproductions of all pages and articles from the New York Times from 1850-2005, including advertisements, photographs, graphics, etc. Every page from the newspaper is included, as well as the New York Times Book Review and the New York Times Magazine. Articles, pages etc. are in PDF format.

For full text articles of New York Times articles from 2002 to the present, use the Newspapers database.

The New York Times - Historical database formats citations in your choice of citation styles, including APA, Chicago/Turabian: Author-Date, Chicago/Turabian: Humanities, Harvard, MLA, and more. Select the "Cite" link, or select a citation style from the drop down list when you email or export a record.

Indexes, abstracts and full-text articles from major national and regional United States newspapers such as: Boston Globe, Christian Science Monitor, Hartford Courant, Newsday, The New York Times, Providence Journal , The Wall Street Journal, Washington Post , and more.

Some articles may not be available in full-text in this database. Use the Journals List to check to see if a journal is available in print or in another database, OR request articles using Interlibrary Loan .

The Newspapers database formats citations in your choice of citation styles, including APA, Chicago/Turabian: Author-Date, Chicago/Turabian: Humanities, Harvard, MLA, and more. Select the "Cite" link, or select a citation style from the drop down list when you email or export a record.

ProQuest Research Library provides access to a wide range of popular academic subjects, including arts, business, children, education, general interest, health, humanities, international, law, military, multicultural, psychology, sciences, social sciences, women's interest, and more. The database includes more than 3,950 scholarly journals, trade publications, magazines, and newspapers (with over 2,700 in full text) from 1971 forward.

Some articles may not be available in full-text in this database. Use the Journals List to check to see if a journal is available in print or in another database, OR request articles using Interlibrary Loan .

The Proquest Research Library formats citations in your choice of citation styles, including APA, Chicago/Turabian: Author-Date, Chicago/Turabian: Humanities, Harvard, MLA, and more. Select the "Cite" link, or select a citation style from the drop down list when you email or export a record.

Access to more than 500 journals in Business, Humanities, Social Sciences, and Science, Technology and Medicine, with some content available in full text. Select the "SAGE Content Available to Me" radio button to find full text articles available in the SAGE database.

Not all articles in the Sage database are available as full text. Use the Journals List to check to see if a journal is available in print or in another database, OR request articles using Interlibrary Loan .

You can export citations from the Sage Journals database to EndNote : You must create an account in the Sage Journals database to export citations. Once you are logged in to the database, select the "Check item" checkbox next to the record(s) that you would like to export. You must click the red "Add to My Marked Citations" button on the right hand side before proceeding to the next page of results. When you are ready to export your citations, select the "Email/Download/Save/Print My Marked Citations" radio button, then click the red "Go" button. On the next page, click the "EXPORT/DOWLOAD to Citation Manager" button. On the next page, select the "EndNote" link and select the "Save to Disk" radio button in the popup window. You can now import your citations into EndNote.

This resource includes digital reproductions of all pages and articles from the Wall Street Journal from 1889-1991, including advertisements, graphics, etc. Access to full-text articles from 1984 - present is available via the Wall Street Journal Newspapers database, WSJ microfilm (1922 - 2006) or the current WSJ print edition (available at Reference Desk). The print index to the WSJ from 1957-1984 is available in Reference and Backfile Reference at REF.HG.W26.

The Wall Street Journal Historical database formats citations in your choice of citation styles, including APA, Chicago/Turabian: Author-Date, Chicago/Turabian: Humanities, Harvard, MLA, and more. Select the "Cite" link, or select a citation style from the drop down list when you email or export a record.